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Murderous Passion

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Working on multiple cases at the same time, homicide detectives Turner Hahn and Frank Morales have their plates full of problems.

Turner is a man with an unnerving resemblance to a 30’s movie matinee idol. He has the same jet-black hair, the same wiry, sardonic grin permanently creasing his lips, and the same deep dimples creasing his face. He's rich, he's smart, and he has a cool car.

Frank is a genetic freak. Big, with no apparent neck to speak of, he has bright carrot-colored red hair pulled back into a man bun and a thick mustache of the same color. Hidden beneath the surface is an eidetic memory that forgets nothing, and the same dry, sardonic wit that his partner has.

Whenever a tough case comes along, the higher-ups dump it into the laps of Turner and Frank. The cases nobody want to touch are the ones these two are best in solving. And they do it with a style all their own.

224 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 29, 2008

293 people are currently reading
216 people want to read

About the author

B.R. Stateham

66 books195 followers
I am a soon to be a seventy five year old writer of genre fiction. And yes, my portrait was used in 1931 for the original design of Boris Karloff's Frankenstein (well, maybe I'm stretching the truth just an itsy-bitsy bit).

I write hardboiled/noir. And fantasy. And someday . . . someday I plan to make a buck two ninety-five doing it. But I'm not holding my breath.

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5 stars
161 (40%)
4 stars
141 (35%)
3 stars
73 (18%)
2 stars
12 (3%)
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10 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews
Profile Image for Cranky - The Book Curmudgeon.
2,091 reviews155 followers
June 17, 2020
4 Cranky Stars


This book is a murder mystery it started with the garote of Dr Holdridge who worked at a very prestigious university. As the story goes on 2 more cases were on Frank Morales and Turner Hahn, both homicide DS's, books. It made the book quite exciting to have different murder cases to solve. There's a small bit of romance just to spice it up.


My own thoughts though was the ending of the big murder, it was solved so quickly. Worth a read for sure.
Profile Image for Forest .
1 review1 follower
September 25, 2020
Crime fiction, while not a genre I read often, never fails to pull me in and Murderous Passions was no exception. The plot in itself is exciting from the start and the introduction of several other criminal investigations only serves to boost the excitement as you read. In using the variety of crimes, the story allows a greater look into the society it is set in and adds further to each of the characters personalities in how they approach them. It is also written in such a way that makes you want to keep reading, the switching between cases encouraging you to read on to find out what's happening in the others. Also, while Stateham reveals clues along the way to allow you to form your own suspicions, the book keeps you guessing right up to the very end. A fantastic read! The only thing that brought down my rating were a few minor grammatical errors (some spelling here and there) that should be addressed for future works.
498 reviews8 followers
November 22, 2025
Pride, greed and plagiarism

It is refreshing to read a book without a lot of confusing detail and an abundance of unnecessary wording to just fill pages. B. R. Statham was able to keep me thrilled with suspense and on the edge of my seat with this mystery. The characters were great and believable. The academic pride of professors and higher educational leadership, coupled with common greed, sets the stage for murder. You will have to read the book to uncover what lengths some people will go to to take credit for the work, and discoveries of others.

I thought the book had a slow and unappealing beginning but soon became engrossing. I hope you enjoy the tale.
Profile Image for Jd.
712 reviews3 followers
December 5, 2025
This was a book more about a police team, police procedures and a few cases. There was slightly more focus on their most recent case than the other three.
It was okay. I understand the author trying to build the scene, but it was unnecessarily wordy. It got to the point that I started skimming some paragraphs to avoid descriptions. It also got repetitive, at times. The characters were okay. It does need to go back to editing. Besides typos, there were conflicting information.
Profile Image for Simon Mcleish.
Author 2 books144 followers
April 17, 2026
My first use of the new DNF status!

American thrillers can tend to the gun-happy side of things, which in this instance seems to be the main interest. Admittedly, I didn't read more than a few chapters. Interesting of Stateham to have tried to convey the reality of a busy murder squad's work, with juggling the various investigations being portrayed, but not for my taste, which is generally much more tuned to the golden age crime fiction, gruesome that also can be sometimes. I suppose that the title would have warned me...

At least, given that I "bought" it in Amazon Kindle when it was free, it didn't cost anything. (I'm not entirely sure if I should indicate that I own a copy, or not, as it will soon be expunged from my Kindle books.
10 reviews
April 9, 2026
Needs better proofreading

Not only grammatical mistakes, but using the wrong character names made the book slightly irritating to read. This was more prevalent in the last part of the book when the author used the name Walter randomly applied to the incorrect character .
The story itself was fairly interesting but rather improbable. It was also surprising that the detectives etc. routinely allowed characters to ramble on confessing without first reading them their rights.
106 reviews2 followers
April 12, 2026
COOL BOOK!

A very good story with an unusual scientific side to it very good cops that are funny and work well together had a nice little romance story in it a few bad words, but overall, it was a good story. and the cops in it were good cops. They really wanted justice and they were willing to admit when they were wrong and they figured out who the bad guys were.. a very good story and I couldn’t put it down
492 reviews
April 4, 2026
Murderous Language

Yet another person who is willing to profane that which many worship by using their names as vulgar exclamations. In addition, there seems to be no better grasp of language than to flip out four letter expletives, including f-bombs as common terms. There are better authors available elsewhere.
2,040 reviews11 followers
January 28, 2024
A very rare 5 stars. I'm stingy with them. What a great duo these 2 detectives are. They've been partners a long time and can almost read each others minds. Great cop sarcasm and humor. Realistic dialogue. Story moves along nicely.
556 reviews2 followers
May 27, 2024
A good story with interesting characters well told.

Turner and Frank have their hands full with several murder cases to handle while trying to help Karen get threw her hard times at the University.
2 reviews
April 15, 2026
Enjoyed the story. Needed better editing. Several times names were mixed up. And some of the details were glossed over and/or conveniently cleaned up quickly.
I will give the author another shot when the opportunity arises.
242 reviews3 followers
April 19, 2026
Tedious

I read 70 percent of the book and then stopped when yet another murder was committed. It was too hard to keep straight all the different crimes. And then there were all the unnecessary details to struggle through.
1,617 reviews8 followers
April 5, 2026
sounded so intriguing

The blurb for this book sounded very interesting, but I didn’t get far at all before the first expletive blasphemy was used.
Why ruin it?
Profile Image for Alayne.
2,539 reviews7 followers
April 11, 2026
2 and a half stars. This book had an engrossing storyline, which kept me reading despite the terrible writing. Mistakes in the use of words (eg, the college was "elusive" instead of "exclusive", and there were many more), and the mixing up of the names of the victim and one of the suspects was very annoying. The victim was Walter and the suspect was Marvin, but quite often, especially towards the end, the suspect was called Walter. Very poor.
Profile Image for Benjamin Sobieck.
Author 34 books54 followers
April 17, 2011
B.R. Stateham’s “Murderous Passions”(Publish America, 2009) sets forth an ambitious task for its protagonists and readers: two detectives have four separate homicides to solve in one novel.

The result is manna for those starved for honest-to-goodness police procedurals. Stateham’s old school style shrugs off today’s trendy“CSI” and “Monk” procedural formats. He opts to cut straight to the bone of yesteryear, with a healthy dose of good ol’ boy testosterone. This is cut-and-dry, whack-‘em-and-stack-‘em cop porn. The good guys are good, the bad guys are bad and the beer is as cold as the dames are hot. “Passions” is a red-blooded novel paired best with the juices of a thick burger dripping down your chin.

Detective Sergeant Turner Hahn oozes with this masculinity. He’s even described as looking like classic alpha male Clark Gable. Hahn’s foil is Detective Sergeant Frank Morales, a round-headed chump who is stiff as lumber and hits just as hard. They trade shots at each other and the criminals they pursue as they muscle through the quartet of homicide cases.

Actually, it’s more like one case. The main focus of “Passions”is the grisly death of the late Dr. Walter Holdridge. The novel opens with Hahn and Morales inspecting the scene of the deceased professor in his laboratory. From there, they delve into a complex world of university grants, academic egomania and a fellow professor’s undergarments.

The three other homicide cases break up the Holdridge investigation with dent-your-face action scenes. The author has Hahn and Morales rushing from placid crime scenes to crack the skulls of the city’s most notorious dirt bags.

While these vignettes are entertaining, they are also distracting. Keeping track of four homicides can be as laborious for the reader as it is for the exhausted Hahn and Morales.

That isn’t to say the characters aren’t enough to hold attention. Hahn is the most interesting, given he is flush with inheritance and libido. But with the distraction of a four-case load, he doesn’t have time to let the reader explore his character. Hahn could easily hold his own were he given the space in a future work. But in “Passions,” the reader only sees the surface of what could become a classic crime fiction detective.

The same goes for the centerpiece case in “Passions,” the Holdridge homicide. It was interesting enough to warrant its own novel. It didn’t need three simultaneous cases as supplements. The result has the author breezing over facets of the case that beg for exploration.

Likewise, the other three cases do not receive the satisfying crunch of a case closed. They end at different spots within the novel’s time frame, throwing off the reader’s sense of climax.

Still, “Passions” will find a place for police procedural enthusiasts yearning for the black-and-white detectives of yesteryear. Author Stateham has pushed the genre back to its no-BS roots. He’s in deep and he’s not full of it. Give Hahn and his case load a little room to breathe, and it’s only a matter of time before root-digging readers meet Stateham.
Profile Image for J.F. Juzwik.
Author 16 books10 followers
April 19, 2011
I have always enjoyed a good 'cop' story, but it has to be one that lets me feel like I'm on a ride-along. I want to see not just the crime, but life in general, not only through the eyes of the criminal, but also through the eyes of the cop(s) as well. Murderous Passions has it all. This one will grab you right from the start, hang on tight, and never let you go. Course, you don't want it to!

Turner and Frank are the greatest thing since ham and eggs. They are perfectly partnered, and compliment each others' personalities and abilities. I wouldn't want to be the bad guy these two are after, but it sure is exhilarating to be permitted to shadow them as they work through their cases.

These are two partners you definitely will want to keep following.
Displaying 1 - 17 of 17 reviews